- Products
- Product Reviews
- Product How Tos
- New Product Releases
- Product Categories
Product Review
Microchip expands serial SRAM lineup
Clive Maxfield8/13/2012 3:41 PM EDT
Key facts
Packaging, pricing, and availability
All six devices from the new serial SRAM family are available in 8-pin SOIC, TSSOP and PDIP packages. The density options are 512 Kbits and 1 Mbit. Pricing starts at $1.16 each in 10,000-unit quantities for the four volatile devices. The 23A1024 and 23LC1024 are available now for sampling and volume production. The 23A512 and 23LC512 are expected to be available for sampling and volume production in October. The two non-volatile devices – the 23LCV512 and 23LCV1024 – start at $1.32 each in 10,000-unit quantities, with sampling and volume production expected in October.
Development support
Microchip is creating a PICtail daughter board, which it expects to make available in February 2013, for use with its Explorer series of modular PIC microcontroller development boards, as well as the XLP 16-bit Development Board. This daughter board will demonstrate the features of both the volatile and non-volatile devices in Microchip’s new serial SRAM family, enabling designers to quickly evaluate them.
Click Here to see the aerial SRAMs product page and associated documentation.
If you found this article to be interest, visit Microcontroller / MCU Designline where – in addition to my Max's Cool Beans blogs on all sorts of "stuff" – you will find the latest and greatest design, technology, product, and news articles with regard to all aspects of designing and using microcontrollers.
Also, you can obtain a highlights update delivered directly to your inbox by signing up for my weekly newsletter – just Click Here to request this newsletter using the Manage Newsletters tab (if you aren't already a member you'll be asked to register, but it's free and painless so don't let that stop you [grin]).
Last but certainly not least, make sure you check out all of the discussions and other information resources at All Programmable Planet. For example, in addition to blogs by yours truly, microcontroller expert Duane Benson is learning how to use FPGAs to augment (sometimes replace) the MCUs in his robot (and other) projects.
- Four new devices from Microchip that feature the industry’s largest densities and speeds. Industry’s first with 5V operation, which remains prevalent in automotive and industrial applications.
- The 512 Kb and 1 Mb SPI devices maintain the portfolio’s low power consumption and small, 8-pin packages.
- Speeds of up to 80 Mbps are achieved via the quad-SPI, or SQI, protocol, providing the zero write-cycle times with near instantaneous data movement needed for offloading graphics, data buffering, data logging, displays, math, audio, video and other data-intensive functions.
- Two additional family members – the 23LCV512 and 23LCV1024 – offer the industry’s most cost-effective options for non-volatile, unlimited-endurance RAM, via battery backup. They feature fast dual-SPI (SDI) throughput of 40 Mbps and low active and sleep currents.
- Serial NVSRAM devices feature high-speed operation without the high pin counts of parallel NVSRAM, and comparable power consumption to FRAM, all at a fraction of the price. Beneficial for applications such as meters, black boxes and other data recorders, which require unlimited endurance or instantaneous writes along with non-volatile storage.
Packaging, pricing, and availability
All six devices from the new serial SRAM family are available in 8-pin SOIC, TSSOP and PDIP packages. The density options are 512 Kbits and 1 Mbit. Pricing starts at $1.16 each in 10,000-unit quantities for the four volatile devices. The 23A1024 and 23LC1024 are available now for sampling and volume production. The 23A512 and 23LC512 are expected to be available for sampling and volume production in October. The two non-volatile devices – the 23LCV512 and 23LCV1024 – start at $1.32 each in 10,000-unit quantities, with sampling and volume production expected in October.
Development support
Microchip is creating a PICtail daughter board, which it expects to make available in February 2013, for use with its Explorer series of modular PIC microcontroller development boards, as well as the XLP 16-bit Development Board. This daughter board will demonstrate the features of both the volatile and non-volatile devices in Microchip’s new serial SRAM family, enabling designers to quickly evaluate them.
Click Here to see the aerial SRAMs product page and associated documentation.
If you found this article to be interest, visit Microcontroller / MCU Designline where – in addition to my Max's Cool Beans blogs on all sorts of "stuff" – you will find the latest and greatest design, technology, product, and news articles with regard to all aspects of designing and using microcontrollers.
Also, you can obtain a highlights update delivered directly to your inbox by signing up for my weekly newsletter – just Click Here to request this newsletter using the Manage Newsletters tab (if you aren't already a member you'll be asked to register, but it's free and painless so don't let that stop you [grin]).
Last but certainly not least, make sure you check out all of the discussions and other information resources at All Programmable Planet. For example, in addition to blogs by yours truly, microcontroller expert Duane Benson is learning how to use FPGAs to augment (sometimes replace) the MCUs in his robot (and other) projects.
Navigate to related information
Most Popular
Datasheets.com Parts Search
185 million searchable parts
(please enter a part number or hit search to begin)
Browse the technical library
Our technical library houses over 4,000 high-quality sponsored white papers, application notes, reference guides, use cases—all organized by company.
Our technical library houses over 4,000 high-quality sponsored white papers, application notes, reference guides, use cases—all organized by company.

